Shifting My Perspective

Property of Kristin Giuliani

September was an exhausting month. It was enlightening and beautiful. It was tedious and draining. I was challenged and stretched and asked to step out of my comfort zone. And I somehow feel simultaneously refreshed and depleted. I have a sense that I just closed a chapter in my life and am stepping into a new one. Although it’s early, I think this new chapter will be defined by unique perspectives – shifting out of autopilot and being willing to look at everything that defines me in a completely different way. I am redefining my work, how I use my skills, and how I spend my time. I can feel it. Change is coming.

 Property of Kristin Giuliani

I am someone who thrives on change – external change. I like to be a participant in changing locations, changing weather, changing activities, changing routines.

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However, I am realizing that it’s a lot less fun when I have to initiate the change by changing something internal first. And the clear message of September is that I can start a new, exciting chapter in my life, BUT, not by first changing my circumstances. I have to change how I see my circumstances first, and look at the same old mundane things in a new way.

Property of Kristin Giuliani
That is infinitely less exciting and infinitely more challenging for me.  And even though that is the entire point of this blog, internal change in the absence of external change is hard, and I’m lazy. And unlike my sister, I still haven’t quite mastered the art of being disciplined.

Property of Kristin Giuliani
After spilling out some deep, soul-searching posts this past month, I feel myself at a bit of a loss this week.

Property of Kristin Giuliani
I am an introspective, internal-processing introvert, and much like I reach my saturation point with people, I also arrive at a point where my external words have run out. I’m sure as this new chapter inches forward, the words will come. But for now, they are hibernating.


So instead, as I step into October, I thought I could share the essence of what I feel I need to be doing through images.


You know, trying to see dishes, laundry, and onion chopping (and the tears they inevitably produce) as art rather than drudgery.

Maybe using my camera to look at my life from a different perspective will help me begin the internal shift.

Then maybe I can see the art hiding in the process of internal change, too.

And embrace it as the exciting journey toward the external change I crave.

Property of Kristin Giuliani

When everything is difficult

IMG_9441Reading Kristin’s post for this week inspired me to write on a topic I’ve been thinking about for a while. I’ve discovered that I am surrounded by people, like my sister, who have generally been really good at everything they do and, especially, everything needed to get through the formative years of life. My best friends growing up were in every gifted program possible and at the top of whatever activities in which they were involved. My siblings were BOTH like this. I remember my brother teasing me because I would study at home. He would say “I got everything done in study hall.” I was the only Wilde child not tested for the gifted program in grade school and I only took one AP class.

I, and my parents, vividly remember the conversation in middle school we had about my grades. All through grade school I got A’s and B’s (heavy on the B’s), with the small exception of the “U” I got in handwriting on a regular basis. A “U” stands for “unsatisfactory.” It is the little kid equivalent to an F. I claim my terrible handwriting is genetic, since my dad is a doctor and EVERYONE knows that doctors have bad handwriting. No one has ever accepted that as a legit excuse. I must have gotten a midterm grade inching close to a C, and my parents decided to have a conversation about the importance of good grades for my future. I protested and said “What’s wrong with C’s?!” to which my parents replied “Nothing, unless you can get A’s.”

My mother claims this was the beginning of my formerly non-existent work ethic. I started putting a good amount of time into practicing my trumpet (my first musical love) and studying hard. I went through high school working very hard to get my good grades, often frustrated that my brainy brother could do it with ease and without studying. Even with trumpet, I had a natural sound and love of the instrument, but wasn’t one of those kids who had perfect pitch, could improvise, sight read well, or understood theory easily. I even found myself in an odd position of getting principal trumpet in All-State Orchestra three years in a row and just being middle of the pack in All-State Band, since orchestra auditions were solely based on all prepared material and band required sight reading.

My dad’s proudest moment of me, to this day, is when I ran the entire mile run in middle school, even though I HATED running with every fiber of my being. I didn’t walk once through the race and, even though I was ridiculously slow, he was so proud that I pushed through and went for something that was sooooo hard for me. I roll my eyes everytime he tells the story, hoping one of my big opera moments will someday usurp the position of “proudest moments.” However, I think this moment and my developed work ethic is what has gotten me where I am today.

I feel like there are two general types of people, those who are really good at lots of things and those who are ok at lots of things. If you are only ok, but have the goal of being great, you learn from a very young age that you have to put in IMG_2476lots of effort to achieve your goals. And, in my case, one area emerges as what you love working at and it becomes the thing in which you strive for excellence. A similar theory is espoused in a great book called “Talent is overrated.” It’s the idea that people who are truly great at what they do are not so only because of natural ability, but because of the type of focused work they put into their craft. Mozart was brilliant because of the musical household and fastidious work regiment his family placed on him at a young age. Tiger Woods was a brilliant golfer because he spent his whole childhood practicing. Natural ability absolutely exists, but if you don’t learn to work, you can never really reach your potential.

I’ve talked with many of my friends who I would put in the “really good at lots of things” categories. Many of them have had a hard time figuring out what to do with their lives, since nothing has really emerged as THE thing they are exceptional at. And many of them struggle with what Kristin described, in pushing past the barrier of real struggle and difficulty in a given area. It’s easier to quit than to fail. These types of people usually have not spent as much time failing as I have.

While I also have a massive aversion to failure, I have discovered that the pain of feeling less-than as a child is what gave me the skills to push through the difficulty now and love the challenges. I actually can’t remember anything I’ve quit because it was too hard. I decided, like my sister, that I wanted to like running, so I started running. Even though it often causes some sort of thoroughly obnoxious injury, like shin splints or issues with my achilles tendon, I find myself anxious to heal, so I can once again start the process of getting better. To be clear, I am still SUPER slow and NOT good at running. But I try. I never assume I will automatically be good at anything I start, and I’m ok with that. If I find it interesting, I dig in and try anyway.

IMG_9827My career path has been riddled with being a bit behind and having to catch up through this kind of work. I had invested 8 years of intense study and practice in the trumpet before realizing I wanted to be a singer. Part of that decision came when I discovered how much I LOVED sitting in a practice room for hours on end, working on my voice. The work was hard, but I loved it. And even then, I was a mezzo soprano and would eventually change to soprano. It felt as though I was starting from scratch and was faced with daily challenges as I moved past the 9 years of mezzo-ness and into the soprano realm. I entered the process of transitioning having no real idea what it would entail, but knowing it would, once again, be difficult (and yep, I was right). But it’s like Edison said when inventing the light bulb: “I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 ways that won’t work.” Every difficulty and struggle gets you closer to success and you HAVE to fail to get there. There is no way around struggle if you want to find greatness.

I still have days when Little Laura emerges, wanting things to be easy, but I do my best to quiet her voice (not an easy feat… she’s a handful). And, it seems, spending my childhood feeling like “The Dumb Wilde,” gave me a strong and important push in the right direction.

Costumes!

This Fabulous Friday Post is brought to you by some of my BEST costumes:

IMG_2548-1 IMG_2536These are from Le Nozze Di Figaro at the Lyric Opera of Chicago. The Costume and Wig people are FABULOUS!
IMG_2508 IMG_0382 IMG_0697 Incase you ever wanted to see what I would look like as a boy. These are “Pants Roles” where women play the roles of pubescent boys. Yep, Scary.

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These are my costumes from my summer at Santa Fe. Incase you wanted to see me as a blonde and… a Deaconess.

IMG_2058 Not sure how old age will suit me… but my friend, Bevin, will look great as a ghost! This was from Arizona Opera’s Lucia di Lammermoor.

These last costumes are from my time thus far at the Lyric Opera of Chicago. The first is from my Debut as Kate Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly. The fun pink and orange one is from Wagner’s Parsifal. I was a Flower Maiden. The Green crazy one is from the Family Opera we performed, The Magic Victrola. My nieces were able to see that show! The final one is from my summer production of Le Nozze Di Figaro. I have a pretty fun job!
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Two sisters. Divergent lives. Exposing the fabulous. Savoring the common. Eliminating the Fear Of Missing Out.